David Park wrote:
>If an integral appears inside a Grid or a Column, which has
>DefaultBaseStyle -> "Grid", it is much shorter in height than in a regular
>output expression.
>
>Regular expression:
>
>Integrate[(f[x] + g[x]), {x, a, b}]
>
>Inside a Column or Grid expression.
>
>Column[{Integrate[(f[x] + g[x]), {x, a, b}]}]
>
>If I use the option SpanMinSize it also increases the size of brackets and
>parentheses.
>
>Column[{Integrate[(f[x] + g[x]), {x, a, b}]},
> BaseStyle -> {SpanMinSize -> 2}]
>
>How can I get back the taller integral sign without changing other spanning
>characters?
>
>
>
I thought we discussed this before. GridBox has
AllowScriptLevelChange->True. So, use either:
Column[{Integrate[(f[x] + g[x]), {x, a, b}]}, AllowScriptLevelChange->False]
or
Column[{Style[Integrate[(f[x] + g[x]), {x, a, b}], ScriptLevel->0]}]
The first option above colors AllowScriptLevelChange red, but works.
Carl
Thanks Carl. At my age I'll probably ask again - unless
AllowScriptLevelChange is a named option for Column and Grid and there is a
link to it on the Column, Grid and ScriptLevel Help pages.
David Park
djmpark at comcast.net
http://home.comcast.net/~djmpark